onthehunt wrote:
Your answers:
As I posted trans problems were a dissapointment. That covers f37 and related trans/torque converter/derate issues.
Ball joints will always be an issue on this vehicle. It's the design, not the ball joint that is bad. Since they have been made this way since 2002 I'll assume you knew about it.
Oil pick up falling off and a broken valve keeper is an assembly problem and covered under warranty. 2 catastraphic failures out of 11,000+ engines doesn't signal the end of the world for me.
Egr and flow control failures are a documented problem with diesel engines. They were a problem then and they are a problem now. Please name me an egr equipped diesel that doesn't have egr problems. (Hint- you can't) I'll also assume you knew this and still bought the crd.
Cleaning the maf every 5000-6000 miles??? Don't know where you got that one. I assume you meant the map/iat sensor. Some report it very dirty and some not. Some report drivability improvments after cleaning, some not. More of a fuel quality issue I suspect. If it doesn't log a code it's not really a problem.
Air in the fuel line. I don't have this problem and I suspect it is not a problem. If you really had an air leak in your fuel system it would show up and stay until fixed. The shudder is not a fuel system problem I feel. I had the shudder and it was fixed with a new ecm.
Engine going into limp mode is a programming issue. It's actually meant to protect the drivetrain from the retards out there.
I haven't experienced this so I cannot comment. Have you??
The new rear main seal was the tech's fault as he damaged it while r&r ing the trans. Read the post. I won't tell you how many rear main seals I put in humves. Give them time, they will leak.
The reason your 240 never threw a code was because it didn't have the technology to do so. You can have your 20 year old diesel's. They sucked in every way except economy and reliability( except the 6.2) If you think the 6.2/6.5 was a great diesel engine you really do know nothing about diesel engines. It was one of the worst diesel engines made and had some really good inj pump problems( gm recalled them because of so many low milage failures) and are really famous for blowing head gaskets and cracking the heads. Not to mention the glow plugs and their cold starting ability.
In summary, things change and diesel's have changed. Not all for the good either. If you love your old diesels so much go buy one. It's the only way you will be happy. If you want to drive a crd be ready to hop on the learning curve like the rest of us. Quit complaining and start fixing. The crd was not meant for everyone, especially people who think modern diesels are those same dirty,slow,non cold starting but reliable diesels of the past. This was an experiment by d/c and I knew that. I still bought one and I like it. I've had problems and some have not been fixed. I still like my crd. It is a one-of-a-kind vehicle with one-of-a-kind issues. Add lack of dealer diesel knowledge, which was just as bad 20 years ago you said, and you end up where we are now. I'm not suprised by this. If you did your homework you wouldn't be either.
I am sure that you know much more about diesels than this software engineer, and I did not post solely as a response to yours, and did not mean it to sound that way. What I am saying is that for the last year-- whenever someone reports a problem-- it is always perceived by many to be some “operator error” until proven otherwise. This is no longer helpful. It is obvious to everyone that this thing has quality control and cheapskate engineering issues. It does not seem appropriate to blame that on the operator. It really starts to get annoying when you listen to this while you are fixing various problems out of pocket on a vehicle still in warranty and yet something else starts acting up and you need help.
As for limp mode, several different people on this site have reported that the engine goes into limp mode while driving-- having to be restarted to regain power. I have not experienced this. However, I have had the traction control cut the power at an inopportune moment while making a U-turn, when a tire let loose. Many thought something like this was the cause and wrote this up to operator error as well-- some somewhat derogatively. But MrMopar even reported that this engine has gone into limp mode outside of the vehicle on a test bench and indicates the cause here:
http://www.lostjeeps.com/forum/phpBB3/vie ... ht=#142068 . This was and is a serious issue that has a fix, and was not an operator error, as it was perceived. It could have or may yet cause someone to get sideswiped or rear ended, regardless-- it has nothing to do with retards being heavy on the throttle. My point by replying to this is that we need to dispose of the ad homoniem “retard”/ “operator error” remarks.
The rest of your responses largely point to the source of the problem-- quality control problems or engineering issues-- none of them proven to be operator errors. It should not be construed as operator error that one expects a new vehicle to work. It also should not be construed that diesel customers don't want reliable and economical, but that they would rather be made into beta testers-- because the technology is “cool”. One of the main points of a diesel is that it is supposed to be more efficient and reliable. If the new technology is not that-- than what good is it? I can get fast with a gasser. With repairs and downtime... this thing has shown to be neither reliable or cost efficient. So it gets 26 mpg? Just how can we cost justify its maintenance and downtime for the repairs? If the repairs don't stop-- we logically cannot, but because we have an emotional attachment to the vehicle-- we try to very hard. I wonder if this is leading everyone into acting in some kind of jihad against anyone who points out serious issues with our sacred cow. It is almost like the LOST CRD forum is some kind of cult or Amway or something. If yours works great... Mine mainly works and I am happy it has fewer problems that many on this site, but I don't doubt that other folk are having issues that are not their fault.
I want the current issues fixed... but at some point I can't leak any more money into the thing. At some point it has to become reliable. So how much cash do I have to depart with before that happens? I do not feel good about spending this cash for something I already paid for-- something that should work... something I bought a possibly worthless extended warranty for. But I suppose I will.. as I am hoplessly succored into the evil diesel Jeep cult now. But I don't blame anyone for being P.O.
By the way-- I never said the 6.2 was a great engine-- but I had less trouble with its power-train than with this thing. Which was kinda my point. It was slow as a dog and the glow plugs took forever, but it ran fine and I did not have to tear apart the powertrain to rework the tranny or the torque converter. I would not have bought one new as gutless and mediocore as it was-- it was bought 10 years old at an auction for a song. We got our money out of it.